This work studies the mechanical and biological properties of Baghdadite (BAG, Ca3ZrSi2O9) coating manufactured on Ti6Al4V substrates by hybrid water-stabilized plasma spray (WSP-H). https://www.selleckchem.com/products/dsp5336.html Hydroxyapatite (HAp, Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2) coating was produced by gas-stabilized atmospheric plasma spray and used as a reference material. Upon spraying, the BAG coating exhibited lower crystallinity than the HAp coating. Mechanical testing demonstrated superior properties of the BAG coating its higher hardness, elastic modulus as well as a better resistance to scratch and wear. In the cell viability study, the BAG coating presented better human osteoblast attachment and proliferation on the coating surface after three days and seven days compared to the HAp counterpart. Furthermore, the gene expression study of human osteoblasts indicated that the BAG coating surface showed higher expression levels of osteogenic genes than those on the HAp coating. Overall, this study indicates that enhanced mechanical and bioactive properties can be achieved for the BAG coating compared to the benchmark HAp coating. It is therefore concluded here that the BAG coating is a potential candidate for coating orthopedic implants.Self-assembled peptide-based hydrogels are promising materials for biomedical research owing to biocompatibility and similarity to the extracellular matrix, amenable synthesis and functionalization and structural tailoring of the rheological properties. Wider developments of self-assembled peptide-based hydrogels in biomedical research and clinical translation are hampered by limited commercial availability allied to prohibitive costs. In this work a focused library of Cbz-protected dehydrodipeptides Cbz-L-Xaa-Z-ΔPhe-OH (Xaa= Met, Phe, Tyr, Ala, Gly) was synthesised and evaluated as minimalist hydrogels. The Cbz-L-Met-Z-ΔPhe-OH and Cbz-L-Phe-Z-ΔPhe-OH hydrogelators were comprehensively evaluated regarding molecular aggregation and self-assembly, gelation, biocompatibility and as drug carriers for delivery of the natural compound curcumin and the clinically important antitumor drug doxorubicin. Drug release profiles and FRET studies of drug transport into small unilamellar vesicles (as biomembrane models) demonstrated that the Cbz-protected dehydropeptide hydrogels are effective nanocarriers for drug delivery. The expedite and scalable synthesis (in 3 steps), using commercially available reagents and amenable reaction conditions, makes Cbz-protected dehydrodipeptide hydrogels, widely available at affordable cost to the research community.3D scaffolds are in the center of attention for tissue engineering applications. Whilst many studies have focused on the biological properties of scaffolds, less attention has been paid to meeting the biomechanics of the target tissues. In this work, we show how using the same original biomaterial, but different fabrication techniques can lead to a broad range of structural, mechanical, and biological characteristics. Starting with silk fibroin filament as our base biomaterial, we employed electrospinning, film casting, and weft knitting as different scaffold fabrication techniques. Among these three, the weft knit scaffold showed outstanding cell-scaffold interaction including full 3D cell attachment, complete cell coverage around individual filaments, and in-depth cell infiltration. Post-fabrication degumming of silk filament yarns resulted in more bulky and less open pores for the silk fibroin knit scaffold. The decreased pore size after degumming of knit scaffold alleviated the need to in-advance pore filling (a requisite for increasing cell adhesion in a typical knit scaffold having big pores). From a mechanical viewpoint, the weft knit scaffold shows the highest mechanical strength alongside with far better extensibility. Interestingly, the silk filament weft knit scaffold (in the course direction) was 100 and 1000 times more compliant than silk fibroin film and electrospun web, respectively. The observed effect of material type and fabrication technique highlights the suitability of silk fibroin weft-knit scaffolds for the regeneration of load-bearing soft tissues such as urine bladder.Shape fidelity and integrity are serious challenges in the 3D printing of hydrogel precursors, as they can influence the overall performance of 3D scaffolds. This work reports the development of superconcentrated inks based on sodium alginate and fish gelatin as an appealing strategy to satisfy such challenges and dictate the quality of the printed scaffolds, without using crosslinking strategies during 3D printing. SEM micrographs and micro-CT images indicate the homogeneous distribution of the polysaccharide in the gelatin-based matrix, suggesting its potential to act as a reinforcing additive. The high concentration of gelatin aqueous solution (50 wt%) and substantial incorporation of alginate have facilitated the highly accurate printability and influence the in vitro stability and mechanical properties of the printed scaffolds. An improvement of the stiffness is dictated by the increase of alginate concentration from 20 wt% to 25 wt%, and an increase of Young modulus with about 46% is reached, confirming the reinforcing effect of polysaccharide. This study highlights the potential of paste-type inks to provide high resolution 3D printed structures with appealing structural and dimensional stability, in vitro degradability and mechanical properties for biomedical applications.Constructing biomimetic structure and immobilizing antithrombus factors are two effective methods to ensure rapid endothelialization and long-term anticoagulation for small-diameter vascular grafts. However, few literatures are available regarding simultaneous implementation of these two strategies. Herein, a nano-micro-fibrous biomimetic graft with a heparin coating was prepared via a step-by-step in situ biosynthesis method to improve potential endothelialization and anticoagulation. The 4-mm-diameter tubular graft consists of electrospun cellulose acetate (CA) microfibers and entangled bacterial nanocellulose (BNC) nanofibers with heparin coating on dual fibers. The hybridized and heparinized graft possesses suitable pore structure that facilitates endothelia cells adhesion and proliferation but prevents infiltration of fibrous tissue and blood leakage. In addition, it shows higher mechanical properties than those of bare CA and hybridized CA/BNC grafts, which match well with native blood vessels. Moreover, this dually modified graft exhibits improved blood compatibility and endothelialization over the counterparts without hybridization or heparinization according to the testing results of platelet adhesion, cell morphology, and protein expression of von Willebrand Factor.